Dr. Nancy Andreasen is one of the pioneers in the development and application
of neuroimaging tools to study the human brain. She has used these tools for the past twenty years to study brain structure
and function in normal healthy individuals and in people who suffer from mental illnesses.

Understanding
how the normal brain works and how abnormalities in its function occur in mental illnesses is a major goal of research in
cognitive neuroscience and neuropsychiatry. This goal has been enormously facilitated by the invention and development of
a variety of neuroimaging tools during the past 20 years. I have been fortunate enough to be able to pioneer the use of many
of these tools in both the study of the normal brain and in the study of people who suffer from mental illnesses. Before
these tools were available, we could only study the brain after people had died, through using post mortem tissue. Now we
are able to visualize and measure the structure, function, and chemistry of the living brain in people of all ages, ranging
from childhood to old age. This makes it possible to answer interesting questions about brain development and aging, gender
differences, the neural basis of creativity or spirituality, and the neural basis of a variety of mental illnesses.

The
tools that our research group is currently using include structural Magnetic Resonance (sMR), functional Magnetic Resonance
(fMR), magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), and positron emission tomography (PET). These
tools permit us to visualize and measure many aspects of the brain—its anatomy (sMR and DTI), its dynamic responses to a wide
variety of cognitive stimuli (fMR and PET), and its chemical activity (MRS and PET).

All our imaging work is
informed by a three-stage experimental strategy: work out the methods, work out the anatomy or circuitry or systems in normals,
and study the nature of the dysfunctions in patients. Consequently, we began our PET studies (and more recently our fMR studies)
with basic methodological work. In addition to conducting basic methodological studies, we focus first on the study of normal
individuals. Since most existing concepts concerning brain functions and mechanisms have been derived from lesion studies
(i.e., stroke, traumatic brain injury), we have very little solid knowledge about the circuitry involved in the performance
of mental operations such as focussing attention or encoding and retrieving information in the intact living human brain.
The use of tools such as fMR and PET to map these operations in vivo opens an entirely new perspective in cognitive neuroscience.
Instead of having to infer how the brain works by observing how it malfunctions when a particular region is "missing," functional
imaging now permits us to observe it during in vivo on line normal performance. This in vivo view of the intact functioning
brain has led to a reappraisal of some basic assumptions about brain function, such as the nature of human memory systems
and their neural substrates.

During the past 20 years we have also developed a variety of software tools that
can be used to extract precise quantitive measurements from MR and PET data. These are available in a software package called
BRAINS2. (BRAINS=Brain Research: Analysis of Images, Networks, and Systems.) We provide free access to this software to
all interested users. It works on a variety of platforms (e.g., Linux, Mac) and provides measurements of cortical gyrification,
brain tissue compartments (grey matter, white matter, and cerebrospinal fluid), and specific brain substructures (caudate,
putamen, thalamus, cerebellar lobes, hippocampus).

Neuroimaging techniques have literally "opened up the brain" and made it possible
for neuroscientists like Dr. Andreasen to study it using powerful quantitative tools. She designed this picture for the cover
of Science magazine to illustrate this point.

BRAINS2 software is used to combine the individual "slices" of tissue
that are obtained with an MR scan, join them together, and create a 3-D model of the whole brain. Various surface characteristics
can be measured, such as surface area, left and right hemisphere differences, curvature indices of gyri and sulci, or cortical
thickness. The images produced are those of an individual human brain. Individual brains vary greatly in their gyrification
patterns.

Functional imaging techniques such as fMR and PET permit us to visualize
individual brains during the process of thinking. Depending on what we are thinking about, we shift our brain blood flow
to the specific regions that we need to use for various specific tasks--imagining what another person is thinking, feeling
emotions, telling a story, and so on. Using functional imaging tools, we can observe and measure how patterns of blood flow
change during different kinds of mental activity. This capability gives us a powerful tool for understanding how the brain
actually works. We can study gender differences, changes with aging, and changes that occur in mental illnesses such as schizophrenia
or depression. We can also use functional imaging to study interesting questions about the neural basis of creativity or
spirituality.